Chargement de la fiche…
Chargement de la fiche…
MonRhumato.fr utilise des cookies pour mesurer l'audience (statistiques) et améliorer le site. Aucune donnée de santé identifiable n'est jamais collectée. Politique de confidentialité.
Votre choix est conservé 13 mois (durée max CNIL). Vous pouvez le modifier à tout moment via Préférences cookies.
3 raisons identifiées
Praticien-chercheur
7 articles scientifiques publiés — formation continue solide
Expérience confirmée
32 ans d'exercice en rhumatologie — recul clinique solide
Délais de RDV courts dans la région
150.8 rhumatos / 100 000 hab. — département bien doté
32ans d'exercice (thèse 1994)
✨ Génération du profil synthétique IA en cours…
Données ANS publiques (Licence Ouverte 2.0) · Enrichissements MonRhumato 100 % opt-in · Toute personne référencée peut demander la suppression ou la rectification.
Source : catalogue national des thèses theses.fr (ABES). Ne couvre que les doctorats / HDR — les thèses d'exercice (DES) sont archivées dans les SCD universitaires.
CLINIQUE DE LA MISERICORDE
15 R DES FOSSES SAINT JULIEN BP 100, 14000 CAEN
Secteur de conventionnement non disponible (médecin hospitalier ou non présent dans l'Annuaire santé CNAM des libéraux conventionnés).
Lien Doctolib = recherche Google site:doctolib.fr (le 1er résultat est presque toujours le profil correct s'il existe).
European journal of neurology · 2019
Background and purposeCognitive impairment, slow walking speed and motoric cognitive risk syndrome (MCR) have separately been associated with an increased risk for mortality in the short term. The aim of the study was to examine the association of MCR and its components [i.e. subjective cognitive complaint (SCC) and slow walking speed] with short‐, medium‐ and long‐term mortality in older community‐dwellers.MethodsIn all, 3778 participants from the Epidémiologie de l'Ostéoporose (EPIDOS) study were selected. MCR was defined as the combination of slow walking speed and SCC in participants without major neurocognitive disorders. Deaths were prospectively recorded using mail, phone calls, questionnaires and/or the French national death registry at 5, 10, 15 and 19 (end of follow‐up period) years.ResultsOver the follow‐up of 19 years, 80.5% (n = 3043) participants died. Slow walking speed and MCR were associated with mortality [hazard ratio (HR) 1.20 with P = 0.004 for slow walking speed and HR = 1.26 with P = 0.002 for MCR at 10 years; HR = 1.27 with P ≤ 0.001 for slow walking speed and HR = 1.22 with P = 0.001 for MCR at 15 years; HR = 1.41 with P ≤ 0.001 at 19 years for slow walking speed and MCR]. There was no association between SCC and mortality. Kaplan–Meier distributions of mortality showed that participants with MCR and slow walking speed died earlier compared to healthy participants and those with SCC (P < 0.001).ConclusionsSlow walking speed and MCR were associated with an increased risk for mortality at the medium and long term, whereas no association was found with SCC.
European journal of neurology · 2020
Background and purposeMotoric cognitive risk syndrome (MCR), which is the juncture of subjective cognitive complaint and slow gait speed, is a pre‐dementia stage. The aims of the study are (i) to compare characteristics between individuals who have MCR defined using slow walking speed and/or increased five‐times‐sit‐to‐stand (FTSS) time as its motor component(s); and (ii) to characterize the association of MCR and its various motor components with incident dementia including Alzheimer disease and non‐Alzheimer dementia in the participants of the Epidémiologie de l’Ostéoporose (EPIDOS) study.MethodsThis prospective and observational cohort study selected 651 participants recruited from the EPIDOS study in Toulouse (France). MCR was defined as the association of subjective cognitive complaint and slow gait speed and/or increased FTSS time in participants without either dementia and mobility disabilities at baseline. Individuals with dementia were prospectively diagnosed during the physical and neuropsychological assessments included in the 7‐year follow‐up.ResultsThe prevalence of MCR was around 7% when using an exclusive motor criterion, either slow gait speed or increased FTSS time, and was 20.9% when MCR subgroups were pooled. MCR was positively associated with incident dementia regardless of its type, and with Alzheimer disease in the slow gait speed MCR subgroup [odds ratio (OR) > 2.18 with P ≤ 0.037] but not with non‐Alzheimer dementia. No significant association between incident dementia and MCR defined using increased FTSS time was shown.ConclusionsOur findings confirm that MCR is associated with incident dementia and that slow gait speed is the appropriate motor criterion for detecting dementia risk.
Maternal & child nutrition · 2017
AbstractWe described the introduction of complementary food (ICF) during the first year of life and identify associations observed with maternal and infant characteristics. We studied 3368 children included in the Epifane cohort, France, 2012. Maternal and infant characteristics and age at introduction of 28 complementary foods were collected at birth and at 1, 4, 8 and 12 months. Kaplan–Meier plots were used to represent probabilities of ICF. A score was used as tertiles in multinomial logistic regression to identify maternal and infant factors associated with ICF agreement with French recommendations. Median age of ICF was 152 days. While 12.6% of infants received complementary food before the age of 4 months, 95% of them were introduced after 7 months. Recommendations were generally followed, except for eggs and added fats, introduced in only 23.2% and 53.1% of 1‐year‐old infants, respectively. Factors significantly associated with the first ICF score tertile (low agreement with recommendations) vs. third tertile were as follows: maternal age 18–24 years (OR = 2.24 [1.49–3.35]) or 25–29 years (OR = 1.57 [1.21–2.04]), education less than or equal to high school graduation (OR = 1.94[1.51–2.48]), birthplace in France (OR = 2.13 [1.41–3.21]), three or more children (OR = 1.70 [1.15–2.51]), no follow‐up antenatal classes (OR = 1.58 [1.22–2.04]), unemployment before and after pregnancy (OR = 1.64 [1.04–2.59]), unemployment before pregnancy and return to work within 12 months (OR = 2.06 [1.05–4.02]), no breastfeeding (OR = 2.08 [1.55–2.79]) or lasting <28 days (OR = 1.68 [1.22–2.31]) or 1–4 months (OR = 1.45 [1.08–1.96]). Recommendations concerning complementary food were generally followed. However, guidelines should be clarified and adapted to families who have difficulties in adopting them.
Source PubMed · Recherche par auteur (homonymes possibles, vérifier l'affiliation).
Frontiers in aging neuroscience · 2022 · Journal Article
Beauchet O, Matskiv J, Launay CP, Rolland Y, et al.
European journal of neurology · 2020 · Journal Article
Beauchet O, Sekhon H, Launay CP, Rolland Y, et al.
European journal of neurology · 2019 · Journal Article
Beauchet O, Sekhon H, Launay CP, Chabot J, et al.
Revue de l'infirmiere · 2009 · Journal Article
Launay C, Favennec A, Bellec M
Maternal & child nutrition · 2017 · Journal Article
Boudet-Berquier J, Salanave B, de Launay C, Castetbon K
Pediatric research · 2022 · Journal Article
Beck J, Bednarek N, Pierrat V, Vilotitch A, et al.
La Revue du praticien · 2005 · Journal Article
Couturaud F, Launay C, Leroyer C